Exit Planning Newsletter for Business OwnersExit_Planning_Newsletter_for_Business_Owners.html

The current recession has given all business owners, quite literally, pause: pause in growth, pause in hiring, pause to reconsider exactly where our companies are heading — or need to head — if we are to meet our owner-based goals.


In the previous issue of The Exit Planning Review™, we discussed the many benefits of using the time afforded by today’s economic downturn to create and enhance the value drivers in your company.


The fundamental questions owners must ask are:

  1. BulletAm I using this precious commodity — time — to prepare my company and myself for sale on the day that the economy revives?

  2. Economic Downturn Gives Owners Time to Prepare for the Recovery of the M&A MarketOr, on that day, will I be where I am today: wishing to sell, but buried in the everyday details of my business and doing little to chart a course toward my ultimate goal?


In addition to using your time to install and energize your company’s value drivers to prepare for sale, today’s economic recession also has given owners time to evaluate if their current business advisors are equipped to help them prepare their companies to sell.


When times are good, most owners chug along with little guidance from advisors. Owners call their lawyers when they have a problem, their accountants when the taxable year-end approaches and their financial advisors when they realize that their daughter might not get that golf scholarship. In short, most owners expect their advisors to react quickly and effectively to whatever problem they pose.


Owners who understand that selling/transferring their companies (the biggest financial event of their lives) for top dollar can only be accomplished through careful planning, expect more. They look for advisors who approach them with specific strategies designed to increase the value of their companies. They do well to hire advisors who have experience navigating the often choppy Exit Planning waters. Most important in today’s market, however, is finding the advisors who can prepare your company to move immediately when the economy revives and business value and cash flow increase.


Why? Let’s look at the number of owners looking to sell their companies before the economy went south. According to a 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers’ survey of 364 CEOs of privately held, fast-growing companies, “nearly two-thirds … plan to move on within a decade or less: 42 percent within five years, and 23 percent in five to ten years.” (“Wide Majority of Fast-Growth CEOs Likely to Move On Within Ten Years, PwC Finds.” January 31, 2005.) Add to this number those owners who will be more than ready to hang up the towel as soon as the market will pay a decent price for their companies and we can estimate that millions of owners want to sell at the market’s first sign of life.


Will you be ready to sell?


If you have hired skilled and experienced Exit Planning advisors, they are already sharing strategies specific to your company that you can employ today — in today’s economy and years in advance of your anticipated sale date — to increase the salability and value of your company. If your advisors aren’t skilled in Exit Planning, they probably have been mute on the subject of your exit.


Exit Planning advisors are contacting the owners they work with about:

  1. Time: Too Much or Too Little?
Active business owners seldom slow down. We all know that the only things likely to reduce your pace are death or terminal burn-out. This is not to imply that you are not well intentioned; quite the contrary. You are so well intentioned that you’ve taken on more tasks than you can possibly complete.Increasing gross margins. Exit Planning advisors are helping owners to take advantage of today’s “pause” to increase gross margins so that when the recovery kicks in, their companies will be the first, and most successful, to rebound.

  2. Indecision: The WRONG Decision
“I haven’t decided what I ultimately want to do with my business, or when I want to exit, or how much money I’ll need, or whom to sell to, so how can I plan my exit? Besides, I don’t want to exit right now.” If you’ve said this, or thought it, you are not alone. Many business owners are either overwhelmed with the thought of exiting or are so busy fighting daily business fires that they think they cannot plan their exits.Becoming the “Best of the Best.” Exit Planning advisors are working with owners to examine every aspect of their businesses. They are asking, “What are tough times telling you about your employees, your vendors, your customers? Are they the ones who will not only help your company to survive the tough times, but to thrive when times improve?”

  3. Meet Today's Challenges and Exploit Today's Opportunities 
Over the past few months we have shared with you a number of ideas about how you and your company can approach both the challenges and the opportunities that this economy has thrown at all of us. We’ve discussed specific issues such as fraud, and more general issues such as preserving value, focusing on cash flow, increasing revenue and keeping all actions consistent with your ultimate goal: leaving your company when you want, to the successor you choose, for the amount of cash you want or need.Reassessing a business exit strategy. Nearly all owners have postponed their planned business exits. Exit Planning advisors are helping owners to figure out exactly how postponing departure affects:

  4. Post-retirement income goals.

  5. Choice of a successor.

  6. Dependence on other sources of income.

  7. Fraud - Do you know it when you see it? 
The subject of employee dishonesty is a delicate one. Owners generally want to trust their employees, and given all the other battles owners fight on a daily basis, they are often not as vigilant as they can or should be. Vigilance requires an investment of time and money in return for an uncertain payoff. So let’s look at a typical fraud scenario. Protecting assets. Exit Planning advisors employ numerous strategies to help owners to protect their assets. These include:

  8. Minimizing tax exposure.

  9. Minimizing liability exposure (by creating multiple entities).

  10. Putting plans in place to downsize — immediately — if economic conditions demand.

  11. Reviewing any buy-sell agreement to make sure it includes provisions for a decrease in business value.

  12. Reviewing contractual obligations of employees to ensure protection of trade secrets and to prevent competition.

  13. Reviewing property and casualty insurance contracts.


We will talk in more detail about the specific strategies owners are using to both survive this recession and to position their companies for sale in the upcoming issues of this newsletter. In the meantime, if you have not yet heard from your advisors, it may be time to evaluate if you have hired the “best of the best.”


Preserve and Protect Your Business On All Fronts 
We kicked off our discussion with the final item — creating value — because today, most owners are so focused on cutting expenses and minimizing risk and taxes that they’ve ignored their ultimate goal: creating a company with enough value to leave it for an amount of money that will support them — in style — for the rest of their lives. Increasing_Revenues_During_Tough_Times.html
Time_-_Too_Much_or_Too_Little.html
Exit Planning Newsletter for Business OwnersIndecision_-_The_WRONG_Decision.html
Time is Essential in the Transfer to Insiders
In this series of articles about transfer to insiders, we identified a number of elements that are part of the well-designed transfer to insiders. The first element we identified was the qualifier: Time.Announcing_a_Tool_For_Business_Owners.html
Elements of a Plan to Sell to Insiders
In the previous issue of this newsletter, we compared the attributes of sales to third parties to those of transfers to insiders. We looked at the often-overlooked risk involved in third party sales and the equally overlooked benefit of owner control and payoff in insider transfers.  Fraud_-_Do_you_know_it_when_you_see_it.html
Preserve_and_Protect_Your_Business_On_All_Fronts.html
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